Several NFL players eulogized Eric Garner’s last words, "I can't breathe," in their own fashion, drawing further attention to the recent spate of black men who have died at the hands of white police officers.

During pregame practice against the Indianapolis Colts, Cleveland
Browns cornerback Johnson Bademosi protested the death of Eric
Garner, wearing a shirt that had scrawled on the back of it,
"I can't breathe."

Davin Joseph, a St Louis Rams guard, wrote the phrase on his
cleats and tweeted it, along with the words: "RIP Eric
Garner."

Detroit Lions running back Reggie Bush sported a shirt bearing
the phrase, “I can’t breathe,” which has become a
rallying catchphrase for thousands of demonstrators protesting in
cities across the country.

In the NBL, LeBron James, star player for the Cleveland
Cavaliers, hinted he may wear a shirt with the rallying phrase in
a Monday game against the Brooklyn Nets, where the Duke and
Duchess of Cambridge are expected to be in attendance.

"I'm looking for one," James said, as quoted by AFP.

On July 17, 2014, Eric Garner, 44, died on Staten Island, New
York, after a white police officer put him in a choke hold, a
technique prohibited by the New York City Police Department.
After repeating about a dozen times, “I can’t breathe,”
Garner, who had asthma, reportedly suffered a heart attack and
died.

Garner left behind a family of six children.

The nationwide protests are focused not only on excessive police
powers, aggravated by local police departments receiving military
hardware leftover from foreign battlefields, but from the
disturbing incidence of black men being killed by white police
officers, who are not suffering legal consequences for their
actions.

The NFL show of support for Garner comes just one week after
five players from the St. Louis Rams entered
the stadium before a game with the "hands up, don't
shoot" gesture displayed by demonstrators protesting the
shooting death of unarmed black teenager Michael Brown by white
police officer Darren Wilson.

The St. Louis Police Officers' Association said the five NFL
players who made the gesture should be “disciplined”
over the act, which the union called “tasteless, offensive
and inflammatory” to officers around the country.

A decision by a grand jury not to indict Wilson in the killing
triggered days of occasionally violent protests in Ferguson and
elsewhere in the country.